Yup. It's the only real way I can see now for DC to challenge Marvel in any meaningful way in live action going forward.
Marvel have owned the cinema space for the past decade, notwithstanding Nolan's movies. Everyone else who has attempted to create a cinematic universe of similar size and scope has failed. That is beyond dispute.
The next 'battleground' so to speak (and I don't just mean in terms of comic book live action) is the cinema vs the streaming services. And it's a battle the streaming services will eventually win.
For DC to be in with a chance of competing with, and potentially outdoing, Disney/Marvel, it has to be owned and controlled by a new media company that recognises the importance that streaming will have going forward. That's Amazon. More than Netflix or Disney, Amazon know how to sell a product, and sell it very, very well.
In my dream world, Amazon purchases DC - and completely breaks the mold as to how to present superhero live action. No more divisions between TV and film. No more 'tentpole' characters and 'secondary' characters. No more ' you can't use that character here' bull****.
A living, breathing multiverse that encompasses all relevant media formats. Jake Gyllenhall as Batman on your cinema screen, on your Kindle Fire Stick, and in your hand as a graphic novel, at the same time, with no barriers.
...or, you know. We could just limp on with a DCEU created and run by old media, full of people who can't see which way the wind is blowing, and are mired ina traditional way of thinking that's fast becoming irrelevant.